Category: News Headline

  • Harrow Bengaluru shines at Loop Awards 2025

    Harrow Bengaluru shines at Loop Awards 2025

    MUMBAI: When it comes to building brilliance, Harrow International School Bengaluru has truly raised the roof. The school has clinched the Citation award for Educational buildings at the Loop Design Awards 2025, outshining over 550 entries from 49 countries.

    Designed by CP Kukreja Architects, the campus marries heritage, ecology, and modern learning spaces. From airy classrooms and performance halls to sprawling sports arenas, every corner flows seamlessly into landscaped courtyards, creating an environment that inspires curiosity and community. The design draws on the 450-year legacy of Harrow School in the UK, giving the first Harrow-branded school in India a distinctive global identity.

    Sustainability is at the heart of the campus, featuring rainwater harvesting, bioswales, natural ventilation, shaded walkways, and locally sourced materials. These eco-conscious strategies earned the campus a USGBC platinum rating, positioning Harrow Bengaluru as a benchmark for sustainable educational design worldwide.

    Board of Governors chairman Aseem Chauhan said, “This award reflects our belief that learning flourishes where heritage meets modernity, where sustainability is a way of life, and where spaces themselves inspire curiosity and community.”

    The Loop Design Awards celebrate global excellence in architecture, interiors, and product design. Harrow Bengaluru’s recognition places it firmly in the international spotlight as a model for the future of educational spaces.

    Harrow International School Bengaluru continues to carry forward its 450-year legacy of British education while weaving Indian traditions and global perspectives, nurturing students ready to lead with courage, honour, and fellowship on a 60-acre campus designed to inspire.

  • Baraat of laughs Chaupal to stream Sarbala Ji this October

    Baraat of laughs Chaupal to stream Sarbala Ji this October

    MUMBAI: Who needs a wedding planner when you’ve got a sarbala ready to unleash chaos? Chaupal is all set to turn shaadi season into a laugh riot with Sarbala Ji, a comedy of errors premiering exclusively on 2 October 2025.

    The film stars Punjabi powerhouses Gippy Grewal as the prank-loving Sucha and Ammy Virk as the shy groom-to-be Gajjan, alongside Nimrat Khaira and Sargun Mehta, who bring glamour, wit, and perfect comic timing to the madness.

    In Punjabi tradition, the sarbala, the groom’s page boy adds charm to wedding rituals. But in Sarbala Ji, this simple role snowballs into a whirlwind of confusion. When Sucha convinces his cousin Gajjan to make him sarbala, the mandap becomes ground zero for misplaced rituals, runaway animals, and relatives who don’t know whether to laugh or cry.

    Big-fat-Punjabi-wedding tropes get a comic twist here, from dhol beats to dance-offs, as director and cast bring both heart and hilarity to the screen. With family feuds, pranks, and surprises tumbling one after another, the film promises a non-stop rollercoaster of giggles and gasps.

    Beyond the comedy, Sarbala Ji is a love letter to Punjabi culture. The music, the vibrant sets, and the depiction of wedding traditions make it a festive treat. The presence of Nimrat Khaira and Sargun Mehta ensures the fun is laced with sass, sparkle, and plenty of memorable one-liners.

    Chaupal, home to some of the biggest Punjabi originals, positions Sarbala Ji as the go-to family entertainer of the festive season. Whether you’re a veteran of dozens of big-fat Punjabi weddings or someone who’s never seen one, this film guarantees to bring the baraat straight to your living room minus the traffic jams.

    So, mark the date. On 2 October, when the groom ties the knot, be prepared for a joyride where rituals meet pranks, traditions meet chaos, and laughter steals the show.

  • Drawer to dollar Cashify unlocks India’s 219.7 billion dollar resale boom

    Drawer to dollar Cashify unlocks India’s 219.7 billion dollar resale boom

    MUMBAI: Phones that gather dust in drawers may soon gather dollars instead. With the refurbished smartphone market pegged to hit a staggering 219.7 billion dollars by 2033, India is powering up to become the world’s recycling and recommerce hub and Cashify’s Great Indian Upgrade 2025 whitepaper shows just how big this reboot really is.

    Drawing insights from 10,000 survey respondents, proprietary marketplace data, and reports from IDC, Counterpoint and Canalys, the study maps how resale culture has shifted from hush-hush grey channels to an increasingly mainstream movement. Yet, the so-called “Drawer Economy” remains a colossal untapped treasure chest 70 per cent of Indians admit to hoarding two to three unused phones at home, signalling billions of rupees in locked-up value.

    The shift in behaviour is undeniable: 33 per cent of consumers now sell old phones to fund upgrades, 40 per cent are lured by competitive buyback offers, and 63 per cent dispose of devices within six months of upgrading. But the grey market still dominates, with 77 per cent of resale happening informally, Cashify argues this highlights the urgent need for trusted, transparent platforms.

    India shipped 151 million smartphones in 2024, up 4 per cent year-on-year, with the average selling price climbing to Rs 22,100. While Apple’s shipments surged 35 per cent, making India its fourth-largest global market, the brand also dominates resale: it commanded 64.5 per cent of refurbished sales in 2024 and 62.9 per cent in the first half of 2025. Three in five refurbished buyers picked Iphones driven by steady demand for the iPhone 14 Pro, iPhone 13 Pro Max and iPhone 12 Pro in the premium Rs 60,000-plus bracket, which itself grew 33 per cent YoY.

    Following Apple are Oneplus (10.2 per cent), Xiaomi (9.7 per cent), Samsung (6.1 per cent) and Vivo, which is showing the fastest growth, rising from 2.1 per cent in 2024 to 3.2 per cent in H1 2025. Oppo and Realme follow at 2.4 per cent and 1.9 per cent respectively.

    While Delhi, Bangalore and Mumbai remain the epicentres of trade-ins and refurbished sales, tier-2 and tier-3 cities are catching up fast, signalling that circular tech culture is spreading beyond metros.

    Cashify has also unveiled India’s first Repairability Index, ranking brands on spare-part availability and repair scores addressing one of the biggest barriers to longer device lifecycles. A solid 57.9 per cent of consumers say they prefer repair over replacement, though cost (53.2 per cent) and part shortages remain major hurdles.

    Backing this push is Cashify’s “repair-first, recycle-always” ecosystem, powered by 200 plus physical stores, a 10,000 plus retailer network, and an AI-driven 80,000 sq. ft. refurbishment facility.

    Awareness is on the rise: 76 per cent of respondents could correctly define “refurbished” as “like new tested and repaired by experts.” Of all refurbished buyers, 60 per cent chose Apple, with purchasing patterns shifting upwards: 32.4 per cent spent Rs 21,000–35,000, while 17.1 per cent spent over Rs 50,000. The top drivers? “Like new at lower cost” (50.8 per cent), “budget fit” (32.4 per cent) and sustainability (8 per cent).

    What builds trust? A 12-month warranty tops the list (52.5 per cent), followed by detailed device reports (16.9 per cent) and “try before you buy” options (16.9 per cent).

    “India’s 219B dollars resale revolution isn’t just a market opportunity, it’s a chance to redefine how technology is consumed,” said Cashify co-founder & CEO Mandeep Manocha. “Our findings clearly show consumers are embracing resale, yet the untapped ‘Drawer Economy’ highlights the urgent need for trusted platforms.”

    Cashify co-founder & CMO Nakul Kumar added: “For too long, old phones have been treated as clutter rather than capital. India’s upgrade culture is shifting from impulsive consumption to mindful circulation. Repairability is key when fixing devices becomes easier, sustainability becomes everyday action.”

    The whitepaper also calls for supportive policy frameworks, from easing customs on refurbished imports to tax incentives for sustainable recycling and digital traceability for e-waste.

    As India transitions from hoarding to habit, Cashify’s data-rich report positions recommerce not just as a market disruptor but as a mainstream economic force, one that puts forgotten phones back in play, turns drawers into goldmines, and powers India’s leap towards a greener digital future.

  • Harman plugs Sound United acquisition; expands product portfolio

    Harman plugs Sound United acquisition; expands product portfolio

    ONNECTICUT: Harman’s $350 million swoop for Sound United is a seismic play in the global audio rivalry, vaulting Samsung’s prized subsidiary to the very top of the premium audio hierarchy. Overnight, the deal delivers Harman an army of industry icons: Bowers & Wilkins, Denon, Marantz, Definitive Technology, Polk Audio, HEOS, Classé, and Boston Acoustics—all famed not just for pedigree or hi-fi bravado, but cult customer devotion across the globe. 

    Sound United’s arrival telescopes Harman’s reach across every lucrative audio battleground—home audio gear, amplifiers, AV receivers, headphones and automotive audio now all under a single, thundering umbrella. By merging marque names, Harman becomes master of a 21-brand constellation, boosting its chances to dominate both traditional and emerging markets—from living room soundscapes to next-gen connected cars and wearables.

    Importantly, Sound United will run as a standalone strategic business unit, preserving each brand’s authenticity and loyal following even as it benefits from Harman’s vast distribution, R&D clout and Samsung’s global hardware ecosystem. The strategy: capitalise on fresh growth while leaving beloved products and sound signatures unspoiled, reassuring audiophile and casual buyers alike.

    For Harman, the move is about more than scale; it’s about future-proofing. Plugging Sound United’s legendary R&D and boutique appeal into Harman’s tech and supply chains means a faster track to innovation—from smarter, immersive hi-fi systems to AI-driven sound and car audio.

    “This is a bet on unmatched experience, quality and the next wave of audio technology,” says Harman lifestyle division president Dave Rogers.

    Analysts predict the expanded Harman will use its new firepower to take on both established peers and disruptors, targeting a global audio market expected to pass $75 billion by the end of the decade. For consumers and audiophiles, it signals more choice, greater technology trickle-down, and the lasting power of classic brands standing tall—with a turbocharged engine behind them.

  • Asianet rules Malayali hearts with 64 per cent prime-time viewership share

    Asianet rules Malayali hearts with 64 per cent prime-time viewership share

    MUMBAI: When it comes to Malayali entertainment, Asianet isn’t just leading the pack, it’s setting the rhythm of prime time itself. With a commanding 64 per cent share of urban prime-time viewership, nearly two out of every three urban Malayalis now reach for the remote only to land on Asianet. That’s not just a number, it’s a cultural footprint proof that Asianet has cracked the code of storytelling that entertains, inspires, and reflects everyday Kerala life.

    Front and centre in this success story is the juggernaut that is Bigg Boss Season 7. The show alone drives 24 per cent of Asianet’s total viewership, making it the single-largest prime-time engine across Malayalam television. Compared to last season, the current edition has levelled up dramatically weekday audiences are up 14 per cent, while weekends have surged a whopping 23 per cent.

    What explains this pull? A volatile mix of drama, emotional storytelling, and a cast that sparks conversations from dining tables to office chai breaks. Bigg Boss has transformed into more than a TV format, it’s a social ritual that spills into memes, reels, and debates in every Malayali Whatsapp group.

    Reality may be booming, but fiction is hardly lagging behind. Asianet’s weekday line-up continues to hold families glued with stories that echo Malayali life. Chempaneer Poovu, Patharamattu, Pavithram, and Teacheramma remain household favourites, weaving tales of dilemmas, resilience and small triumphs. Meanwhile, newer entrants like Mazhathorum Munpe are steadily winning loyalty, proving Asianet has mastered the delicate balance of nostalgia and novelty.

    Asianet’s power doesn’t stop at serials and reality. The channel has carved a niche with its marquee cultural specials and premieres events that feel less like programming and more like festive gatherings. The nostalgia-packed Maveli Kottaram, the adrenaline-filled star singer special event, and the much-talked-about premiere of Thudarum have created moments that transcend living rooms and bind generations together.

    Since its birth in 1993, Asianet has been more than just a channel. Over 32 years, it has mirrored Malayali aspirations, frustrations, and celebrations, standing by as a cultural companion through shifting eras of broadcast and format. Today, its reach goes beyond Kerala, stretching across the Middle East, Europe, North America, and Southeast Asia, ensuring the global Malayali diaspora feels connected to its roots.

    Even as formats change and new platforms emerge, Asianet continues to feel contemporary while staying rooted in tradition. It remains the gold standard in Malayalam entertainment. a channel that’s less of a broadcaster, more of a family member.

    Because in Kerala, prime time isn’t a slot, it’s Asianet time.

  • Twinkle Khanna bags new role as face of Titan’s Irth campaign

    Twinkle Khanna bags new role as face of Titan’s Irth campaign

    MUMBAI: There are handbags, and then there are stories you carry around in leather and zippers. With a wink and a wisecrack, Twinkle Khanna, aka Mrs Funnybones, has now been roped in as the first-ever brand ambassador for Irth Bags, from the House of Titan. And true to form, she’s already got a bone to pick with the bag industry.

    The brand’s latest campaign, shot under her Mrs Funnybones avatar, doesn’t just showcase handbags, it pokes fun at them. From zippers that betray you at the worst possible moment to totes that don’t understand how women actually move, the films flip the script with wit, sass, and design solutions that promise to make IRTH the everyday ally women didn’t know they needed.

    “There’s a whole world that lives inside a woman’s handbag snacks, secrets, sanity, sometimes even a screwdriver!” Twinkle quipped. “This campaign felt like the perfect fit for me. It’s clever, it’s honest, and it treats bags not just as accessories, but as companions in the chaos and charm of everyday life.”

    The campaign kicks off with a spotlight on Irth’s Initials collection, the brand’s first monogram line. In her trademark style, Mrs Funnybones reveals how perfect design isn’t just seen, it’s felt, making even a simple bag a conversation starter. From tall shoulder bags and sleek handhelds to backpacks and wide shoulders, the Initials range merges timeless elegance with Irth’s design-first philosophy.

    Titan Company Ltd business head of women’s bag division Kanwalpreet Walia summed up the vibe: “A woman’s bag is far more than an accessory. It’s her constant companion, her secret keeper, her styling partner, and sometimes even her snack stash! With this campaign, we wanted to spark playful conversations around all the fabulous and not-so-fabulous moments women share with their bags. And who better to lead this dialogue than Twinkle Khanna with her sass and sparkle?”

    The films, produced by Kondurkar Studio under the creative direction of Amrish Kondurkar, are designed to be bite-sized drops of fun each one highlighting a fresh handbag truth. “It’s a collaboration of shared sensibilities,” Kondurkar explained. “Mrs Funnybones brings her wit and joyful take on daily life, Irth brings thoughtful design that makes each of those moments a little better. Together, they elevate the everyday.”

    Behind the scenes, the campaign brought together a powerhouse creative team: from director Afshan Hussain Shaikh and cinematographer Kartik Vijay, to music by Sanjay Das and production design by Daaku Aunties. The polished films are already live on Youtube and across Irth’s and Twinkle Khanna’s Instagram handles, giving audiences a first peek into a campaign that promises style with substance, and humour stitched right into the seams.

    As India’s women’s accessories market grows, Irth is carving out its own niche by being design-led, insight-driven, and refreshingly honest. And with Twinkle Khanna at the helm, expect handbags to become less of a silent accessory and more of a sparkling conversation piece.

    Because let’s be honest when it comes to bags, every woman has a story. Irth just made them a little funnier.

  • Surya joins hands with GLS University

    Surya joins hands with GLS University

    MUMBAI: When it comes to fresh innings, GLS University has knocked it out of the park. The Ahmedabad-based institution has roped in Indian cricket superstar Suryakumar Yadav as its brand ambassador, bringing together the worlds of fearless sport and forward-thinking education.

    Fondly known as Mr 360 for his audacious stroke play, Surya embodies resilience, adaptability and ambition, qualities GLS says mirror its own vision of preparing students to thrive in real-world challenges. His journey from street cricket to captaining India in T20I echoes the university’s rise in under a decade as one of Gujarat’s most dynamic centres of learning.

    “I am thrilled to be associated with GLS University,” said Yadav. “What excites me most is how their legacy combines with new thinking, encouraging students to take risks, stay disciplined and think beyond the ordinary.”

    Welcoming him to the fold, GLS president Sudhir Nanavati remarked, “SKY is more than a cricketer, he is a symbol of belief and perseverance turning dreams into milestones. That is exactly the aspiration we want every GLS student to embrace.”

    GLS executive director Chandni Kapadia added, “Surya doesn’t just play cricket, he paints the sky with possibilities. His fearless 360 degree play reflects our multidisciplinary approach, inspiring students to go beyond limits.”

    Founded in 2015, GLS University is backed by the legacy of the Gujarat Law Society, established in 1927. With industry-linked programmes, dual degree pathways and global collaborations, the institution is betting big on innovation and skill-based learning.

    The partnership with Surya aims to spread a message of excellence and leadership, blending education and sport to inspire the leaders of tomorrow. And as this collaboration takes flight, one thing is clear, for GLS and SKY, the boundaries don’t exist.

  • Eveready’s toy truck sparks joy this Durga Puja

    Eveready’s toy truck sparks joy this Durga Puja

    MUMBAI: When it comes to lighting up festivals, Eveready has gone beyond batteries and straight into hearts. This Durga Puja, the brand has built the Ultima Bahon, the largest AA battery-powered remote-controlled toy truck, to carry the idol of Goddess Durga into a celebration organised by underprivileged children in Kolkata.

    The playful creation, powered by eight Eveready Ultima AA batteries, has already entered both the India Book of Records and the Asia Book of Records. But more than the feat of engineering, it has turned into a symbol of simple joy, bridging the gap between big-budget pandals and smaller, heartfelt pujas.

    “Durga Puja is a festival of joy and togetherness,” said Eveready Industries India Ltd CEO Anirban Banerjee. “With Ultima Bahon, we wanted to bring smiles to children and give them a story they can cherish forever.”

    The toy truck, designed with miniature depictions of Durga’s traditional bahons: the lion, owl, swan, peacock and mouse, is a nod to tradition wrapped in innovation. Actress Priyanka Sarkar, present at the unveiling, called it “a reminder that celebrations don’t need to be huge to be special, sometimes the simplest joys create the most unforgettable memories.”

    Supported by the Vikramshila Education Resource Society, the initiative saw Eveready sponsor the entire puja for children up to Class 4, ensuring that their devotion shone just as brightly as the city’s glittering pandals.

    Recognised as the largest toy truck of its kind, the Ultima Bahon will also be on display at the 95 Pally Puja Association during the festival. For pandal hoppers chasing lights and spectacle, it’s a gentle reminder: sometimes the most powerful celebrations run on nothing more than a few batteries and a lot of heart.

  • Good Day stirs up India’s chai love

    Good Day stirs up India’s chai love

    MUMBAI: Biscuit dunking has never sounded so sweet. Britannia Good Day is giving India’s favourite chai break a chart-topping twist with its new campaign “Chai khaa lo, Good Day duba lo”, a playful call to take a bite of tea.

    Inspired by a tea-seller’s viral “chai kha lo” chant, the brand has turned a street-side moment into a national mood. Partnering with viral sensation Yashraj Mukhate, Britannia has dropped a catchy “Chai Anthem” that celebrates the unbreakable bond between steaming chai and a dunked Good Day biscuit.

    Mccann Worldgroup has bottled this energy into a series of snappy 20-second films, capturing everyday Indian scenes: a chatty hostel evening, a quiet train journey, all stitched together with the joy of dip-and-sip.

    “Chai time is the heartbeat of India, and Good Day has always been a part of that magic,” said Britannia Industries general manager–marketing Archana Balaraman. “We wanted this campaign to celebrate that shared joy in a fun, instantly relatable way.”

    Mccann Worldgroup executive vice president and creative head south Sambit Mohanty, added that the idea was to highlight Good Day’s timeless partnership with chai through wholesome stories and familiar faces.

    So, the next time you pour yourself a cup, don’t just sip it. Dunk in a Good Day, hum the new anthem, and let your tea break hit all the right notes.

  • GST 2.0 reloads India’s growth story at Network18’s power-packed summit

    GST 2.0 reloads India’s growth story at Network18’s power-packed summit

    MUMBAI: Talk about tax reform with extra firepower Network18’s Reforms Reloaded 2025 lived up to its billing as India’s biggest policy stage, convening the nation’s top minds just as GST 2.0 kicked in on 22 September 2025. Policymakers, CEOs, economists, defence strategists, and global investors gathered in Delhi to decode how the new regime could reshape India’s economic trajectory and set the tone for its Vision 2030 leap.

    The day was packed with insights, optimism, and the occasional hard truth. From GST reforms to defence indigenisation, divestment to digitisation, leaders sketched out how India could convert reform rhetoric into real, lasting impact.

    Chief economic advisor V Anantha Nageswaran called GST 2.0 “a very significant landmark reform”, predicting it will provide a “very significant boost to domestic demand”. Coupled with recent tax concessions, he said, the multiplier effect would “quite definitely boost GDP numbers”, with FY26 growth expected towards the upper end of the 6.3–6.8 per cent range.

    Tourism minister Gajendra Singh Shekhawat emphasised that the reforms would touch lives across strata, “from a farmer to a millionaire in Mumbai,” with 95 per cent of goods seeing a reduction in taxes. This, he argued, would put more money into consumers’ pockets, spur MSMEs, and even boost domestic tourism.

    Consumer affairs minister Pralhad Joshi went a step further, hailing GST 2.0 as “the biggest reform since 1975”. He announced a dedicated consumer helpline to tackle complaints about GST benefits not being passed on and praised the new online input credit refund system: “Compliances have been simplified, refunds have been made online… what can be a bigger relief for businesses?”

    DIPAM secretary Arunish Chawla highlighted how reforms in capital markets were democratising investment. Despite FIIs pulling out Rs 1 lakh crore between January and August, domestic institutional investors (DIIs) poured in Rs 5 lakh crore, with two-thirds of DIIs now individual investors. “As markets stabilise, we will bring in more OFS, minority stake sales and IPOs, and exceed this year’s Rs 47,000 crore divestment target,” Chawla said, cautioning against obsession with headline figures.

    Defence secretary Rajesh Kumar Singh spotlighted the government’s push for self-reliance, announcing 25–30 billion dollars in annual capex for the next decade, with 75 per cent of that to be spent within India. The move, he argued, would not only strengthen defence capabilities but also catalyse indigenous manufacturing and innovation.

    Beyond GST, panellists debated India’s reform roadmap: asset monetisation, renewable energy, frontier tech, and reshaping globalisation in India’s favour. The mood was decidedly optimistic that GST 2.0, alongside these reforms, could power a competitive, consumption-led economy.

    Network18 (Broadcast) CEO Avinash Kaul framed the day’s significance: “At a time when global economic shifts and technological disruption are transforming industries, Reforms Reloaded sparks future-focused conversations on governance, GST, and India’s evolving role in the global economy.”

    By the end of the summit, one thing was clear: GST 2.0 isn’t just another acronym in India’s policy alphabet soup. It’s the pivot around which India’s growth story for the next decade will turn, a story that leaders at Reforms Reloaded believe could make Bharat both resilient at home and credible on the world stage.

    Because when it comes to India’s economic future, the message from the summit was loud and clear: it’s time to reform, reload, and rise.